Champions Red Bull Salzburg
|
|
Champions | Red Bull Salzburg |
---|---|
Relegated | Kapfenberger SV |
UEFA Champions League | FC Red Bull Salzburg |
Europa League |
Rapid Wien Admira Wacker Mödling SV Ried |
Matches played | 180 |
Goals scored | 438 (2.43 per match) |
Top goalscorer |
Jakob Jantscher Stefan Maierhofer |
Total attendance | 1,297,902 |
Average attendance | 7,211 |
← 2010–11
2012–13 →
|
Champions | WAC/St. Andrä |
---|---|
Relegated |
LASK Linz TSV Hartberg |
Matches played | 180 |
Goals scored | 520 (2.89 per match) |
Top goalscorer | David Poljanec |
Total attendance | 428,262 |
Average attendance | 2,379 |
The 2011–12 Austrian Football Championship was the 100th anniversary of the event. The highest league is the Austrian Football Bundesliga, which marked its 38th season and was contested by ten teams. The Austrian football champion was determined in four heats. The championship began on 16 July 2011 and ended on 17 May 2012 with the completion of the 36th and final round.
The champion was Red Bull Salzburg for the seventh time. Rapid Wien was the runner-up by six points. While Salzburg became eligible for the qualification to the UEFA Champions League (second round) by winning the championship, Rapid and third-place Admira Wacker Mödling – the most successful promoted team in Bundesliga history – became eligible to play in a qualification for the UEFA Europa League (second round). Sixth-place SV Ried was also eligible because of its participation in the cup final of the Europa League.
Kapfenberger SV ended the championship in last place and therefore had to move down to the second-level First League after four seasons in the Bundesliga.
The Austrian Football First League began on June 10, 2011 and ended on May 18, 2012 after the 36th and final round. The Carinthian cooperative associations Wolfsberger AC and SK St. Andrä won the championship. WAC, which ended its cooperative with SK St. Andrä after the 2011–12 season, moved up to the Bundesliga for the first time. The last place team of TSV Hartberg had to move down to the Austrian Regional League Central. The second-to-last place team had to play two relegation matches against Grazer AK, the champion of the Central Regional League.
In the three Regional Leagues (East, Central, and West), teams played two heats for advancement into the First League. Two of the three teams would qualify. In 2011–12, the champion of the Regional League West (WSG Wattens) met the Regional League East champion SV Horn in the qualification, while the Regional League Central champion GAK met the First League last-place finisher. Insofar as the relegated teams did not have other arrangements, three teams had to move down to the fourth level league.